This past Monday, at Central United Methodist Church on Adams Street in Detroit, Michigan, hundreds rallied, marched and shared a meal celebrating the legacy of Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.

The coalition was comprised of activists, community leaders, students, poets, parents and clergy. And while millions around the country were tuned into the televised inauguration of the first black president’s second term, those who had braved the gusty, snowy weather to gather in Detroit shared a different tone, rallying against the many injustices plaguing disposable communities nationwide, against the placid appropriation of Dr. King’s image and iconography by a society that still segregates on the basis of race and class - laid bare in cities like Detroit where the unmistakable burdens of second-class citizenship bear down on a majority black population.

Fifty years back, on June 23, 1963, at Cobo Center in Detroit, King had stood before 25,000 people delivering the first version of his famous "I Have a Dream" speech during a local march. King spoke broadly of the emancipation struggle for blacks which, then-100 years after Lincoln's proclamation, held the same urgency as before; he also addressed racial segregation as a national shame that imperiled the future of democracy.

"The price that this nation must pay for the continued oppression and exploitation of the negro or any other minority group is the price of its own destruction," he said. King asked the gathered audience to struggle for a "new day," to "carve a tunnel of hope through the mountain of despair."

Fifty years later, chocolate cities like Detroit, Inkster, Highland Park, Flint and Benton Harbor are cast under the long shadow of state emergency manager laws, stripped of all right to self-governance and community-controlled education. Entire communities are buried under mountains of inequality, and King, reflecting today would likely, it seems, speak more of nightmares than dreams.

On Monday, at Central United Methodist Church, the map of struggle was redrawn. Speakers touched on the civil rights battles of today - anti-foreclosure defense, equitable education, livable jobs, community governance, food justice, displacement. The theme was "Renew the Struggle for Jobs, Peace and Justice to Eradicate the Triple Evils of War, Racism and Poverty."

Below are a few photos captured by a veteran photojournalist, the Pulitzer Prize-nominated Daymon Hartley.

Jorge Parra, president of ASOTRECOL sewed his lips shut in a final hunger strike on Nov. 20th, asking GM to negotiate a dignified resolution for the 200 workers fired who developed workplace injuries.

Melvin Thompson, Detroit autoworker and former President of UAW Local 140, connects the struggle for worker rights from Bogota, Colombia to Detroit, USA. In early December, Thompson began a fast in solidarity with Jorge Parra and the striking GM workers.

Unidentified young girl, sitting in the front row, listens intently to the speeches.

An overflow crowd attended the 10th. annual celebration of MLK. The event was first organized in 2004 as a response to the imperial advances in Iraq and Afghanistan, calling for the fortunes funneled to be re-directed into reconstructing decaying cities and instituting just social policies.

Tolu Olorunda is a writer and cultural critic currently living in Detroit, Michigan, who is author of The Substance of Truth (Rotterdam: Sense Publishers, 2011) and whose work has appeared widely online and in print. He can be reached at: [email protected].

Daymon Hartley was a staff photographer for the Detroit Free Press and freelancer for corporate, labor, government, nonprofit and private clients. In addition to Detroit, he has covered the Middle East and the political turmoil in Central America. He is five-time nominee and two-time runner-up for the Pulitzer Prize, was named Michigan Press Photographer of the Year and has received dozens of awards from the AP, UPI, MPPA and the Detroit Press Club.

This past Monday, at Central United Methodist Church on Adams Street in Detroit, Michigan, hundreds rallied, marched and shared a meal celebrating the legacy of Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.

The coalition was comprised of activists, community leaders, students, poets, parents and clergy. And while millions around the country were tuned into the televised inauguration of the first black president’s second term, those who had braved the gusty, snowy weather to gather in Detroit shared a different tone, rallying against the many injustices plaguing disposable communities nationwide, against the placid appropriation of Dr. King’s image and iconography by a society that still segregates on the basis of race and class - laid bare in cities like Detroit where the unmistakable burdens of second-class citizenship bear down on a majority black population.

Fifty years back, on June 23, 1963, at Cobo Center in Detroit, King had stood before 25,000 people delivering the first version of his famous "I Have a Dream" speech during a local march. King spoke broadly of the emancipation struggle for blacks which, then-100 years after Lincoln's proclamation, held the same urgency as before; he also addressed racial segregation as a national shame that imperiled the future of democracy.

"The price that this nation must pay for the continued oppression and exploitation of the negro or any other minority group is the price of its own destruction," he said. King asked the gathered audience to struggle for a "new day," to "carve a tunnel of hope through the mountain of despair."

Fifty years later, chocolate cities like Detroit, Inkster, Highland Park, Flint and Benton Harbor are cast under the long shadow of state emergency manager laws, stripped of all right to self-governance and community-controlled education. Entire communities are buried under mountains of inequality, and King, reflecting today would likely, it seems, speak more of nightmares than dreams.

On Monday, at Central United Methodist Church, the map of struggle was redrawn. Speakers touched on the civil rights battles of today - anti-foreclosure defense, equitable education, livable jobs, community governance, food justice, displacement. The theme was "Renew the Struggle for Jobs, Peace and Justice to Eradicate the Triple Evils of War, Racism and Poverty."

Below are a few photos captured by a veteran photojournalist, the Pulitzer Prize-nominated Daymon Hartley.

Jorge Parra, president of ASOTRECOL sewed his lips shut in a final hunger strike on Nov. 20th, asking GM to negotiate a dignified resolution for the 200 workers fired who developed workplace injuries.

Melvin Thompson, Detroit autoworker and former President of UAW Local 140, connects the struggle for worker rights from Bogota, Colombia to Detroit, USA. In early December, Thompson began a fast in solidarity with Jorge Parra and the striking GM workers.

Unidentified young girl, sitting in the front row, listens intently to the speeches.

An overflow crowd attended the 10th. annual celebration of MLK. The event was first organized in 2004 as a response to the imperial advances in Iraq and Afghanistan, calling for the fortunes funneled to be re-directed into reconstructing decaying cities and instituting just social policies.

Tolu Olorunda is a writer and cultural critic currently living in Detroit, Michigan, who is author of The Substance of Truth (Rotterdam: Sense Publishers, 2011) and whose work has appeared widely online and in print. He can be reached at: [email protected].

Daymon Hartley was a staff photographer for the Detroit Free Press and freelancer for corporate, labor, government, nonprofit and private clients. In addition to Detroit, he has covered the Middle East and the political turmoil in Central America. He is five-time nominee and two-time runner-up for the Pulitzer Prize, was named Michigan Press Photographer of the Year and has received dozens of awards from the AP, UPI, MPPA and the Detroit Press Club.